Tag: Mental Illness

  • Controversy as mother of three dumped bybusinessman lover battles mental illness

    Controversy as mother of three dumped bybusinessman lover battles mental illness

    Until a few months ago, Azeezat Popoola and her lover and businessman, Kabir Ademola, were in a sizzling romance. So much so that the two were like an item. Ademola, a haulage operator with a fleet of trucks transporting goods for a multinational food and beverage company in the Ota area of Ogun State, showered Azeezat, a mother of three and lotto agency operator, with money and gifts, and was said to have thrown a lavish birthday party for her where even his family members and friends were guests.

    However, Azeezat’s life took a dramatic turn from joy to sorrow after Ademola allegedly parted ways with her. At the moment, her bubbly mien has been eclipsed by a strange illness that has rendered her speech incoherent, while she has also drastically emaciated.

    Azeezat’s family alleged that Ademola has a hand in her worsening mental health problem. Her father, Chief Rasaq Popoola, a community leader and chieftain of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) in Abule Egba area of Lagos State, said he suspected that Ademola might have a hand in his daughter’s illness.

    He said: “My name is Rasaq Popoola, a native of Ilero, Oyo State. I am disturbed by my daughter’s sudden strange sickness which started about a year ago.

    “Three years ago, Azeezat brought Ademola Kabir to me while I was hosting a meeting of my colleagues (OPC members) in the Agbado/OkeOdo LCDA.

    “As soon as the chairman of my (OPC) zone sighted Ademola, he said he should leave, saying that he had a strange negative aura.

    “About six months later, I received numerous calls from people that my daughter has started emaciating and acting in a manner that suggests she has been afflicted with mental illness.

    “When I visited her at the place where she was running a lotto office, she ran away after uttering incoherent words. She also said that Ademola was responsible for her deteriorating mental health.

    “She looked like someone that had been used for rituals, hence I want Ademola to explain what he has done to my daughter and release her from bondage, if he is the one behind it.”

    Speaking at a parish of a Celestial Church of Christ where she was taken to for healing, Azeezat spoke lucidly but suddenly became incoherent, rendering her explanation inconsistent.

    She said: “I was brought to this church by my father in January this year.

    “They said I was acting funny, but I know what I am doing.

    “They beat me up and took me on a motorcycle to a spiritualist in Joke Ayo area of Alagbado.

    “On the contrary, I am hale and hearty; nothing is wrong with me.

    Read Also: Nigerian hospitals lack personnel to manage mental illnesses- expert

    “I am currently pregnant for Ademola. I am carrying a pregnancy of twins and the babies talk to me every day, acknowledging that Ademola, the alfa and king of Oyo, is their father.

    “I have not done any pregnancy test, but I know that I’ve been pregnant for Ademola since last year.

    “They just took me on Sunday and brought me to this church despite the fact that I was doing well in my business before now.

    “I have never met Ademola before apart from seeing him in a photograph, but he impregnated me. He is a transporter.

    “Like I said, I haven’t seen or met him before, but the twin babies are moving in my belly and having conversations with me.

    “I also shared a bowl of pepper soup with a man called Elepo. But the pepper soup was spiked with a poisonous substance after which I began to experience failing health.

    “I do not know the man that gave me the pepper soup, but I became relieved after prayers.

    “I became pregnant in October 2023 after Ademola slept with me in March.

    “Ademola’s wives were the ones behind my problem and sickness.”

    One of the prophetesses at the church where Azeezat was undergoing healing said: “Azeezat used to be a good lady until her sickness started and she started acting funny.

    “She would stand up when other members of our church were praying and would not comply with what members of the church were asked to do.

    “The strange illness worsened after she became a recluse and we went to her house and prayed for her.

    “We later brought her to the church for further prayers but she suddenly left on foot and we asked some members to trace her to her house where we later found her.”

    Ademola, however, said he had no hand in Azeezat’s misfortune, saying that he only dated her for a few years before they parted ways shortly after the 2023 general election.

    “Azeezat is my former girlfriend. She took me to one woman, a prophetess on a Valentine’s Day.

    “The woman asked me to buy a set of chairs for her church but I declined because of my Islamic faith.

    “She (Azeezat) was always disturbing me for money to pay tithes in the church, and I warned her against such obligation because she was just coming up as an entrepreneur.

    “She would shake her body intermittently as if something was tormenting her, and at a point she asked me not to share same bed with her in her apartment.

    “When I started noticing that she had health issues, I alerted one of her sisters to it but I didn’t know what happened to her thereafter.

    “Her sister told me that she was having problems with her business and that might be the reasons for her health issues.

    “But I insisted that there was more to her illness than meets the eye.

    “All my warnings to her were the reason she took me as her enemy. I know my wife very well that she could not harm Azeezat.

    “What actually led to our break-up is that around the last general election, she told me that she was asked to do seclusion at the church and requested that I visit her at the church because she was sick. But I refused.

    “I told her that if she was sick and admitted in a hospital, I would visit her there, but I would not visit her in a church because a church is not a hospital where sicknesses are treated.

    “When she left the church after her seclusion, she sent me one of my clothes and food flask left in her apartment.

    “But I have a friend who lives around her neighbourhood and he was always seeing her whenever he was passing through her street.

    “That friend of mine was the one that alerted me to her deteriorating health one day, and advised me to submit myself for medical test because he noticed that Azeezat had emaciated drastically.

    “I told my friend that I had parted ways with Azeezat and that I could not have contracted any disease from her since we are no longer together as lovers.

    “However, when people close to us continued to urge me to find out what was wrong with her, I visited her at the place she was using as lotto office and she cried while sharing her plight with me.

    “She explained to me that she was battling hunger arising from loss of patronage of her business as customers were no longer coming to her office.

    “She said she had to borrow the uniform her son, El-Amin wore to school and that she could not even complete the payment of her children’s school fees totalling N15,000.

    “I requested for her bank account number and paid the money into the account so she could defray the fees.

    “She also explained that she had no foodstuff at home and that she would need my assistance. I promised that I would send her some money for foodstuff and left her office.

    “She had a row with a young PoS operator beside her office and I settled the matter for them and urged her to be friendly with her neighbour.

    “The following day, I learnt that she was still keeping malice with the girl, and when I demanded an explanation for her recalcitrance, she rained curses on me.

    “Out of anger, I told her that I could eject her from the office she was using for business since I was the one that paid for it.

    “I asked her to refund the money that I gave her the previous day. She said she had spent the money and I left.

    “I pray that God gives her a perfect healing, because she told me that she dated a man after she fell out with me and that she took pepper soup with the man, not knowing that the meal was laced with poison that made her to stool uncontrollably for hours at night.

    “I can swear by taking radiator water that Ogun (Yoruba god of iron) should deal with me if I have a hand in Azeezat’s mental problem.

    “I don’t have a hand in her health crisis and I am ready to swear by anything.”

  • Ruined by substance abuse (1)

    Like a time bomb that is bound to explode if not urgently detonated, the rising incidence of drug abuse which has been resulting in mental health illnesses  among the citizens, precisely teenagers and youths,  may in the near future spell doom for the country if not quickly addressed. The Federal Neuro Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba few days ago said the facility recorded  50 per cent  increase in the number of patents treated for drug and substance abuse last year. The worrisome development  according to experts has ruined the lives of many  promising young boys and girls and rearing to destroy more if not immediately tamed.  INNOCENT DURU who visited some psychiatric homes reports:

     

    “This boy  has dented my image. As a pastor,  how can I explain it that my son indulged in drug abuse, to the extent that he has developed mental illness? What on earth led him into this demonic venture?”

    The above was the lamentation of a clergyman whose son had developed mental illness after a period of indulging in substance abuse.

    Frustration was written all over  him as he paced up and down wondering what had befallen him and how he would have the courage to still mount the pulpit to ask  wayward church members to turn a new leaf.

    “I am at loss over what has happened to me. He had always been a good boy and everybody around could swear that he couldn’t have touched a cigarette before. If I were not around and somebody had said this to me on the phone, I would have refused to believe it because I trusted him. There was no sign that he was into such. How he got into all this remains a mystery to me,” the distraught father said.

    A relation of a female  victim,  who gave his name simply as John, was  embittered as he shared the story of his sister’s plight.

    He said: “We saw all this coming and all our efforts to stop her was rejected by her. Unfortunately, we are the ones still bearing the brunt of her recklessness. She is in her late teens but she has always lived a wild life. She goes out and returns to the house anytime she likes. At times, acrid smell of alcohol would be oozing out  from her mouth.

    “The first time I saw cigarette in her bag, she said it was her friend that forgot it  and she decided to keep it for her. I foolishly believed her without knowing that was one of her tools of self-destruction.”

    “It has been financially and psychologically challenging taking care of her. The stigma alone is worse than anything you can think of because everybody now uses that to describe our family.”

    A relation of a sickle cell patient, who is also mentally sick, said he developed the illness after getting addicted to injecting himself with tramadol meant to relieve pains.

    “They sometimes give them such powerful pain killer whenever they have crisis. But he got addicted to it and always used it even when he didn’t have pains. That was what resulted in her mental problem.

    “The problem we are facing is now two folds. From dealing with sickle cell problems, we are also now faced with the problem of managing his mental illness. All this costs a lot of money and it is  physically, emotionally and psychologically distressing.”

    An undergraduate in one of the rehabilitation homes visited by our correspondent, according to the  care giver, suffered the fate after recklessly indulging in consumption of cannabis.

    “I learnt that he started indulging in hard drugs by  mixing  the cannabis leaf with beans. He subsequently moved from there to smoking it. At that point, he became very daring and began to bully  people around.

    “ It is a very unfortunate development because all the efforts to give him a very sound education in a private university appears to have become a huge waste.  Where are the people that led him into this? Have they not all gone their various ways?”

    At Abeokuta, another care giver said he had tried to stop the child from the unholy practice of drug abuse to no avail.

    “He was always going to some bad joints at Lafenwa where all manner of wayward children converge to  indulge in reckless use of drugs. If you get a part of the area, you will find a heap of cough syrups that these people have drunk. Apart from cough syrups, they also indulge in the use of cannabis, codeine and tramadol. There is one thing that they call sokudaya that they also use.

    On several occasions, we tried luring him away from that place but he kept returning there but it was as if he was under a spell to consume drugs. I am seriously worried that in spite of the large number of security outfits we have in the country, drugs are still being publicly sold. If the drugs are not so much available, many of our children would not have access to it.”

    Experts decry the  rise mental illness among substance users. There have been growing concerns among psychiatrists about the wave of mental illness among substance abusers.

    The 2018 annual report of the Federal Neuro Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba, obtained by our correspondent, showed that there was 5o per cent  increase in the number of patents treated for drug and substance abuse last year.

    The annual report showed that a total number of males treated in the facility rose from  133 in  2017 to 195 in 2018.  The figures of the females rose from 24  in 2017 to 40 in 2018.

    Speaking on the development, a psychiatrist in the hospital, Dr Modupeola  Omotojesi, said:

    “Our statistics has shown us that the use of substance has increased, especially in age groups. We are seeing it in younger individuals  between  15 and 16 years . We are increasingly seeing it.  Statistics has shown us that most children are beginning  to use it more from primary six to Junior Secondary School 1  level as their first level of introduction.  What we see is just a tip of the ice bag compared  to what is happening in the society.

    “It is on a very increased level  and it is something that everybody, the government, the society, the family  needs to be seriously concerned about.  The number of patients using substance has increased in the facility.  Substance abuse is like a monster. We really don’t know what has hit us as a country .”

    She noted that the development  portends a lot of danger locally, nationally and internally. “One of the major dangers it posses is the quality of the next generation we are going to produce because the use of substances itself has shown that when it gets to addiction level, it is a brain disease.

    “Imagine having a population of young people who are the future of tomorrow  already having impaired functioning because of the use of the substances that they have taken, what would be the quality of our leadership in future if we don’t  start attending to it now and begin to take care of it as an epidemic? It is at an epidemic level.  Measures have to be taken. We need a lot of advocacy, a lot of education,  and we need to be aggressive educating the young ones about what these substances are, and what implications they have on individuals and the nation as a whole”.

    She advised  there should be control on the availability of these substances, adding: “We need to tighten availability. We should not be talking about it in hush tones. Drugs abusers could be infected with HIV in the course of sharing needles; the y could have liver damage, Hepatitis, lung infections  and cancer. The person can have personality problems

    “When you have an individual that is anti- social, and you are having them on the increase,  they could cause a lot of violence. Once you are under the influence of substance, you can do anything.

    The use of substances is also a factor for the increase in crime rate in the society because if you do a screening for a lot of people that are violent, many of them have some form of substance in their system. Substance facilitates violence.”

    One of the consultants managing the drug abuse unit at Neuro-Psychiatry Hospital, Aro, Abeokuta, Ogun State, Dr Sunday Amosu, also lamented the development. “In recent times, drugs have become ubiquitous. It is in every nook and cranny of the society and there is no class distinction. The adults are there and the youths are predominant.  The old men also  have their alcohol problems too.  Those drugs that were not with us before are now here. In the past, there were some synthetic drugs like Adam and Eve  and MMVA  that were used abroad but one way or the other they have been smuggled to Nigeria .

    “Some cliques have access to these drugs. Some few years back, a lab was discovered at Satellite Town  where some of these synthetic drugs were being produced here for export. Definitely, such drugs would get to the market here too.   Drug is a big problem. Even in our environment,  cannabis is the number one illicit substance.

    “Studies in our environment as far back as  the 90s by the late Professor Odejide  say that the first exposure to drug is in the early teenage years.

    “ However, before parents get to know,   it is always some months later. People have seen children who are 10  or 11 years doing drugs but parents may not know until much later. but on the average, majority started in secondary school”, he said.

    Amosu, who is a  senior consultant psychiatrist at the Abeokuta hospital, described drug abuse as  a robber, noting that it makes the person to lose everything as he would not be able to play his role in the society. He can’t contribute to the GDP of the country. Such people make unemployment rate to increase.   He could develop  mental illness and liver problems. If they are hospitalised, man –hours are lost and the families are affected.

    “When one person in the family is sick, it affects the others and they have to cough out the money that is not enough. It is a vicious circle because everybody will be affected.  Even when they have this problem, they also recruit some other people. Drug abuse does no one any good in the society.  All hands must be on deck  to tackle it. There is no doubt about the prevalence.”

     

    Tell- tale signs that your child is abusing drugs

    Delving into his wealth of experience, Dr Amosu enumerated some  tell-tale signs   that show somebody is abusing drugs. “Some of them can be smelling of alcohol,  some people  could have angular stomatitis  that show this person has been long on alcohol. Those indulging in cannabis can have blood- shot eyes. On those who inject needle, you can see needle track.

    “ Even at home, you can notice it when somebody develops sudden change in behaviour, an easy going guy confronting his father and warning him.  When you see that  the behaviour of your child suddenly changes and he is becoming more secretive, you have a high index of suspicion. When the circle of friends changes and the ones he comes home with look wild and like yahoo yahoo boys, you should be suspicious of him. Confront him and if he denies, bring him to the hospital so that we can run a test.  There are many things that when we even get from the client, we don’t tell the parents so that we don’t break their hearts.  We may not tell them the extent because when they hear,  it would break their heart”.

    Parents, he said, should have the spare keys of the children’s rooms and should find time to go there to carry out some checks. “Sometimes, you can find what we call paraphernalia of drugs like matches, lighter  and so on.

    “ Some of them try to mask it by eating  candies that have mentol flavour.  Some use perfume and roll on. They tend to be secretive  and would not come to the sitting room when everybody is there.  When a child repeatedly takes  his bath, it  could be an attempt to mask the odour of the drugs.”

    He added: “When you are in doubt, there are tests that you can do if you have the facility. You can do urine screen  and that will pick out cannabis and other drugs.  Those who have breathe analyser, it could pick out acceptable alcohol level  and also detect if it is higher than normal from the breath.

    “When you pick it and the person denies, you can do a confrontational interview by saying the test reveals this, what do you have to say? At that point, you will see them stammering.  Some  at an anxious stage would be the one to come out and  say, I have this problem, please help me. “

     

    Stages in drug abuse

    Dr Amosu went on to list the four stages in drug abuse. “The first is the stage of experimentation or the stage of initial contact.  At that stage he is taking it only once in a while. At this stage there is no tell-tale sign. People may not even know unless somebody stumbles on him.

    “The second stage is that of more regular use.  Here he uses it and can now go and buy it  and still managing to function at home and in the society and as long as he is functioning, nobody might know. There is no curiosity around him.

    “The third stage is the stage of abuse when they would begin to develop problems like drunk driving, involving in auto-crash, having issues at work.  Before they get to that point, some five, six years might have added to their age.  That is why you could see them in their late teens and 20s.

    “The final stage is the stage of dependence or stage of addiction.  The hallmark of that stage is what is called tolerance and withdrawal syndrome.  Tolerance means that he needs to increase the dose to get the desired effect. That is the addiction we are talking about. It is a stage where the person cannot do without it.  The withdrawal symptom is the psycho-psychological symptoms that are specific to the substance.  When  the person does not have access to the substance, he would begin to develop these symptoms.

    “Those who take drugs like heroine and petazozin, when they don’t have access to them,  they would begin to have flu-like symptoms as if they have malaria.They would be drooling saliva, drooling water from the nose , water from the eyes and goose pimples all over the body.  That is what is referred to in street parlance as jonsing. Immediately he takes the drug again, the symptom vanishes. People on this stage are less compared to other stages.

     

    NDLEA yet to speak

    Contacted for the reaction of the agency on  the  menace of drug abuse and its attendant consequences on the citizens, the spokesperson of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) , Jonah Achema, promised to provide a response.  He was, however. yet to respond as at the time of filing this report.

     

     

  • Mental illness …. How to defeat the storm (Part 2)

    New cases of depression abound in Nigeria every day.

    Soon after the publication of this column last Thursday, another strange case hit the headlines … a 20-year-old youth beheaded his father, aged 65. Many radio stations would appear to have recognised that depression and mental illness cases deserve more attention than they had previously received.

    Presenters now suggest that whoever finds his or her neighbour behaving subnormally should try to straighten him or her up with pep talk, or call the social services for help. Last week, in the introduction of this series which is concluded today, this column said: …

    Early this months, an 18-year-old Nigerian killed his mother in their home, had canal knowledge of her corpse, ripped her body open in several places with a knife and then removed some vital organs which he sold to ritualists. In police detention, he broke down, saying he did not know how it all happened.  A few days later, the news emerged of yet another successful suicide on the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos. Lately, the bridge had become a place from which suicide -prone people, one of them a medical doctor, plunge into the Lagos Lagoon below. The police had been keeping 24-hour watch over this bridge for some time. But in this last suicide, a Radio Nigeria employee beat the system and jumped to his death in the Lagoon below. We have been shocked as well by the story of a teenage girl who lived in a multi-tenancy apartment. She concealed her pregnancy for nine months from her co-tenants. When the baby came, they were startled by the cries of a new born baby. By the time they arrived in her room, she had broken the baby’s neck and swirled the face backwards. They called the police immediately.

    These are just a few of the new faces of depression which have popped up in Nigeria, since this column last visited this subject. Only last week 100 containers of Tramadol and Codeine illegally imported into the country were seized by the Customs Service at the Lagos ports.

    Tramadol and Codeine are leading causes of depression and mental health questions in Nigeria. So are diabetes and many other factors which have not been contained.

    As factors which cause depression multiply in Nigeria, growing even in magnitude, and more people go down, this column tries from time to time to remind its readers that there is yet no serious handle on it in this country, and that every-one should be doubly watchful not to inwardly cave in to predisposing factors and to eat and adopt healthy lifestyles which support mental health.

    The last such column was read on-line by one of the editors of JEN REVIEWS, Jen Miller, who was researching DEPRESSION. Jenne informed me of a newer study on this subject and such findings as were thought helpful to help a depression patient bounce back to life.

    A report on that study was presented from last Thursdayin a two-part series which is concluded today. It was originally published on-line under the title A BLUE PRINT WHEN FELLING BLUE and the Subtite HOW A MENTAL HEALTH DIAGNOSIS CAN BE EMPOWERING.

    I believe it will be helpful for people with mental health challenges and the doctors, neurologists, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and nurses who look after them. So should it for the parents of depressed people, their other family members (husbands, wives and children, siblings and friends).

    Thanks, Jenne Miller … The article which follows below can be found in https://www.jenreviews.com/mental-health-diagnosis.

    I have noticed that people have different reactions to mental health diagnoses than they do to medical ones. For example, when I was diagnosed with panic disorder it felt different from when I was diagnosed with allergic rhinitis. It was difficult for me not to view my diagnosis of panic disorder as some kind of moral shortcoming. Throughout the years, I have learned that viewing my diagnosis as a personality flaw would make it harder for me to come to peace with it and have the willingness to explore treatment options.

    It is not useful, and not at all accurate, to attach guilt and to such conditions. I did not engage in any actions that resulted in me developing panic disorder. A combination of genetic predispositions in my DNA and social experiences I had early in life have influenced my brain to develop in such a way that I sometimes respond to situations with a disproportionate amount of fear and terror – often over a very short period of time. This is not a moral shortcoming, it is a combination science and learned behavior.  I can learn to manage it though and work with therapists or peer groups to take steps to “unlearn” the behavior.

    Now, let’s go back to that doctor’s visit we discussed earlier. Imagine how we might feel at the end of each of these visits. I can attest that after I receive a medical diagnosis, I am often relieved. Most of the time, I am informed of what the problem is, what medication to take, and what lifestyle choices I can make to relieve the symptoms of the condition. Even though the steps to treat it might be a nuisance, at least I leave knowing what to do and feeling a bit more empowered.

    When treating mental illness, it is often difficult to make a diagnosis after one visit. Providers have to identify a diagnosis for insurance billing purposes, but after just one visit with a client that diagnosis is preliminary. It is inaccurate to stay that you will leave your first appointment with an explanation of how to vastly improve our symptoms, but the point that I am trying to make is that once an explanation is provided it can arm you with additional knowledge about how to manage your situation and put you in a position where you can make a choice.

    Any time I needed to seek help for my mental health symptoms, I tried to view it as a learning opportunity. I would ask about the known causes, any research that has been done on it and what has been successful for others who have been living with it. I would also reflect on how the information that I obtained applied to my own situation and determined (sometimes with a provider and sometimes on my own) what the best next steps would be in my action plan.

    For me, it was empowering and validating to be reminded that I was not alone. As I said earlier, 40 million adults in the United States have a mental health condition. And there are forums on the internet, and sometimes in-person support groups, for many different mental health conditions where you can connect with other who are finding solutions. The more you know about the root of your distress, the more power you will have to manage the symptoms and make your own choice about the best next step. Mental health professionals can help with the evidence based guidance – but we are not experts on you – you are!

     

    Challenges with this process and how to stay empowered through them

     

    Mental health treatment isn’t always linear. If you need a medication to improve your mental health, you may need to try a few different drugs or different dosages before you find the right prescription that works for you. If you need to seek a therapist or support group, you may need to try different groups or providers before you find the right match. And you may go through mental health treatment, get better, and find that a month or a year or five years down the line, you need treatment again. There may not be a quick fix.

    It is true that sometimes the dynamic between a therapist or psychiatrist and a help seeker can feel disempowering to the client. When working with clients, I have always tried the best I can to use the strengths perspective which focuses on a person’s assets and resilience, rather than their pathologies. It is important for practitioners to know that our communication style and view of the client as a non-expert of their own life can contribute to their feelings of disempowerment.

    Speaking from the experience of being on the consumer end of mental health treatment, I have always felt much more empowered when I saw providers who used the strengths perspective.

    Whenever I have felt disempowered, it has helped me to focus on what was immediately in front of me. When I have gone through episodes of worry and doomsday forecasts in my mind about things “never getting better,” I was able to get through it by putting thoughts of the future aside and engaging in a useful task that would give me an immediate sense of gratification. Enter…cleaning! It sounds a little silly, doesn’t it? Never in a million years did my feminist inspired brain think that domestic tasks would help me feel empowered. But in certain moments, they really did. I even tried some DIY cleaning ingredients which made it fun for me. It was kind of like a creative project. I would make something, use it to change the environment and feel a sense of accomplishment afterwards. Of course, recovery and wellness as a whole are not that simplistic. But there have been several times where a night of giving some TLC to my apartment helped ground me and remind me that my mind did not always have to be in the future and that I could enjoy simple tasks in front of me in the meantime.

     

    Let’s talk more about empowerment

     

    OK, so you were informed of your different treatment options and have made a decision about what you would like to do. How can the sense of empowerment you felt when you made that choice stick with you as you go through the process of recovery?

    A Canadian study that was facilitated in 2001 explored factors in the lives of adults with a mental illness that influenced the degree of empowerment felt in their lives. Every participant was in some kind of mental health treatment (either therapy, medication management, a peer support group, or a combination of more than one treatment method). The study revealed that the two factors below had a significant influence on empowerment:

    • Personal motivation: When consumers of mental health services were able to take more initiative in making choices, it resulted in improved confidence, skill development, and greater sense of control over their lives.
    • Supportive Relationships: Consumers of mental health services reported feeling more empowered when their personal and professional relationships were supportive and fair. This resulted in increased participation and involvement in the community, particularly if they were able to connect with a community of peers who they saw on a regular basis.

    I have actually witnessed the peer support models become increasingly common in the past decade and know of individuals who have discovered a sense of purpose once they become involved in peer support. These kinds of groups and relationships have the potential to offer mental health consumers a sense of connection that may be difficult to find elsewhere.

    Another way that having a mental health diagnosis can result in empowerment is through resilience. Those of us who have lived with a mental illness have often been placed in positions where we have had to struggle to find new or different ways to cope with life’s stressors. It has been my experience that surviving through the moments where the mental illness is at its worst forces us to learn skills to help us persevere. Even though I felt hopeless and vulnerable in the midst of my worst mental health crises, I always came out of each of them feeling a little stronger and a bit more confident in my capacity to grow through adversity. And some coping skills I have learned as a result of struggling with anxiety have resulted in positive changes in my life that I otherwise may never have experienced.

    For example, I had no interest whatsoever in meditation before my anxiety hit its peak in my early twenties. I tried meditation, with some skepticism, after some peers and providers had recommended it to me. Meditation ended up benefiting me so much that I continued to practise for long after my symptoms improved. As a result of practising meditation, I have become more patient, more present, and more appreciative. Had struggling with mental illness not given me the motivation to try new coping skills, I may have never discovered this practice that has enriched my life.

    I have heard others share similar feedback about exercise. Several of my peers specifically mentioned running as an activity that helped them with things such as “clearing their head” or “setting their perspective for the day”. One challenge with exercise though, is that it can be hard to start particularly when you are having symptoms of depression. These symptoms can suck away your energy level and motivation.

    When discussing the benefits of early morning exercise, Jen mentions a visualisation activity  that can help counteract some of the self-deprecating thoughts and beliefs that come with depression. Our thoughts can sometimes trap us into believing that certain things are not options. I have certainly gone through this before. It sounded a little bit like this “There is no way I can get up at six to hit the treadmill tomorrow. I’m not going to have the energy.” And then I literally pictured myself hitting the snooze button until 7:15.

    Changing our narrative, and the way we visually see the narrative playing out, can be useful. Psychologists have found that the self-fulfilling prophecies that occur during depression can create a cycle that is difficult to get out of. Visualising yourself overcoming challenges has the potential to break this cycle.

     

    The takeaway

     

    We are all familiar with the stereotypes of mental illness. Advocates, consumers, and providers across North America have been fighting to challenge these stereotypes and provide correct information about mental health. Stigma against mental illness can often deter people from seeking treatment and may cause them to view mental illness as a personal weakness rather than a treatable condition. This perspective can be reframed by viewing a mental health diagnosis as a framework for establishing a treatment plan. Some mental health consumers may be able to shift this perspective on their own, but providers and the public need to also take accountability. Stigma is created by public opinion. If the public could have more empowering and empathetic views toward people who have a mental illness, it could lead to a paradigm shift that could help more people see diagnosis as a blueprint rather than a bombshell.

  • Mental illness …. How to defeat the storm (Part 1)

    Early this month, an 18-year–old Nigerian killed his mother in their home, had canal knowledge of her corpse, ripped her body open in several places with a knife and then removed some vital organs, which he sold to ritualists. In police detention, he broke down, saying he did not know how it all happened. A few days later, the news emerged of yet another successful suicide on the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos. Lately, the bridge had become a place where suicide –prone people, one of them a medical doctor, plunge into the Lagos Lagoon below. The police had been keeping 24–hour watch over this bridge for some time. But in this last suicide, a Radio Nigeria employee beat the system and jumped to his death in the Lagoon below. We have been shocked as well by the story of a teenage girl who lived in a multi-tenancy apartment. She concealed her pregnancy for nine months from her co-tenants. When the baby came, they were startled by the cries of a new born baby. By the time they arrived in her room, she had broken the baby’s neck and swirled the face backwards. They called the police immediately.

    These are just a few of the new faces of depression, which have popped up in Nigeria, since this column last visited this subject. Only last week 100 containers of Tramadol and Codeine illegally imported into the country were seized by the customs service at the Lagos ports.

    Tramadol and Codeine are leading causes of depression and mental heath questions in Nigeria. So are diabetes and many other factors which have not been contained.

    As factors which cause depression multiply in Nigeria, growing even in magnitude, and more people go down, this column tries from time to time to remind its readers that there is yet no serious handle on it in this country, and that everyone should be doubly watchful not to inwardly cave in to predisposing factors and eat and adopt healthy lifestyles which support mental health.

    The last of such column was read on-line by one of the editors of JEN REVIEWS, Jen Miller, who was researching DEPRESSION. Jenne informed me of a newer study on this subject and such findings as were thought helpful to help a depression patient bounce back to life.

    A report on that study is presented in a two-part series from today. It was originally published on-line under the title A BLUE PRINT WHEN FELLING BLUE and the subtitle: HOW A MENTAL HEALTH DIAGNOSIS CAN BE EMPOWERING.

    I believe it will be helpful for people with mental health challenges and the doctors, neurologists, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and nurses who look after them. So should it for the parents of depressed people, their other family members (husbands, wives and children, siblings and friends).

    Thanks, Jenne Miller…. The article which follows below can be found in https://www.jenreviews.com/mental-health-diagnosis.

    A Blueprint When Feeling Blue: How A Mental Health Diagnosis Can Be Empowering

    When First Impressions are the Worst Impressions.

    The first time you ever heard the term “mental illness”, what did you think of? I can tell you what I thought of.

    I was in the beginning of high school the first time I recall hearing this term. At the time, I associated it with people who were unstable. I thought of people who were violent or adults who had tantrums or isolated old women who never left the house. I thought of mental illness as something that was permanent, something that individuals “had” and couldn’t recover from. Even though de-institutionalisation was prevalent by that point, I still thought of people who have long stays at psychiatric wards and pictured them mumbling to themselves in a straight jacket.

    Ironically, I was going through my own struggles with mental illness at the time. I didn’t call it mental illness then. I would go back and forth between feeling anxious and depressed, but I thought it was teen angst and aloofness. But was I mentally ill? My 16-year-old self would say “No way. I’m not crazy.” (Whatever “crazy” means…)

    My teenage image of what an adult living with a mental illness might look like.

    As I learned more about mental illness, my view of it changed substantially. By the time I was halfway through college, I realised that my anxiety and mood disorder had a significant impact on my functioning and that mental health existed on a much wider spectrum than I thought. My lived experience with mental illness was one of several factors that influenced me to study human behaviour. But what about people who do not have the desire to learn about this topic? Are their impressions as biased, extreme, and inaccurate as the examples I mentioned above?

    My teenage reactions to the term “mental illness” were similar to the negative stereotypes that exist in the public sphere. One of the most egregious stereotypes of people who live with mental illness is that they are more likely to be violent than the general population. The truth is that people who have a mental health diagnosis are about 10 times more likely to be the victim of a crime than the perpetrator.

    A mannequin represents a victim of crime on the street. Despite certain stereotypes, individuals with a mental illness are 10 times more likely to be the victim of a crime than the perpetrator.

    Perhaps the stereotypical images discussed above are the first to come to people’s minds because they are the most extreme interpretations of what mental illness might look like. The hard truth is that the majority of mental illnesses are subtle. Somebody could be diagnosed with conditions such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression or anxiety and the rest of us would have no idea. In fact, over 40 million adults in the United States have a mental health condition. That is equal to nearly one in five people. And contrary to my 14-year-old imagination, the majority of adults with a mental illness are not violent, institutionalised, or home bound.

    Mental illness affects children, adolescents, and adults from all walks of life, but this is not often talked about due to stigma. Although efforts to reduce stigma have made recent progress, it is not uncommon for the people who I have worked with to experience guilt and shame as reactions to a mental health diagnosis. I have heard story after story about their worries and projections. Would a mental health diagnosis alter their life in a frightening way? Would they have to take medication forever? Would they be able to work at a level that would allow them to meet their goals?

    A man expressing worry and sadness, reactions that many people may have when diagnosed with a mental illness.

    When new symptoms arise, it is reasonable to be concerned about how they may impact our quality of life. Yet, forecasting defeat can make symptoms of almost any mental health condition even worse. In fact, if is possible to utilise the information gathered about your diagnosis to make informed decisions about how to take care of yourself moving forward.

    Something doesn’t feel right…..

    I think it is safe to say that we can all relate to having a physical illness or ailment. We have had upset stomachs, scratchy throats, or aches or pains that seemingly came from nowhere. All of us can relate to the feelings of helplessness and annoyance that arise when we want the condition to go away, but we have no control over when it will because we are unsure of what caused it and how to fix it. Some of us may have even been informed that there is no way to “fix” the ailment because we have something chronic, but that we can learn to live with it by managing the symptoms.

    Now imagine that you are having symptoms, but they are emotional instead of physical. Picture struggling with a relentless sense of hopelessness, prolonged sadness, sudden episodes of panic, recurring flashbacks to a traumatic incident, or intense fear that others might be out to harm you. Like having an upset stomach or a mysterious pain, there could be a variety of reasons why you are having these symptoms and they are not always clear. And when we see a doctor for the weird stomach ache or sore throat that won’t go away, what does the doctor do? Ask questions: How long have the symptoms been occurring? Do they happen at specific times of the day? Do they happen after you eat? Then they will probably examine your throat or press on your stomach to examine your body further.

    An experience that many of us are familiar with at the doctor’s office.

    A similar process occurs when you seek consultation about a mental health condition. You tell a therapist, social worker, or psychiatrist the symptoms and life events that you have been experiencing, and they will ask a series of questions to help find the nature of your condition. The questions that these professionals ask are typically called bio-psychosocial assessments and tend to be quite comprehensive. Similar to when you visit a medical doctor, the treatment plan may not be clear after one session (in fact, in many cases it is not) but it can offer a roadmap about what to do nest.

    I’d like to be clear that not everybody, who sees one of these professionals necessarily has a mental health condition that can be treated using the same biological model that applies to medical diagnoses. In many circumstances, the problem that brings someone to a therapist or social worker requires a treatment plan that has a higher emphasis on fixing social or environmental problems. Yet, these interventions are also based on best practices from previous research and can improve mental health outcomes. British author Johan Hari wrote  excellent book named: “Lost Connections”, which gives several examples of what these interventions look like and how they can improve symptoms that were originally presented in a more clinical setting.

  • Unbreakable focuses on mental illness

    A lovely wedding has just been celebrated and followed by a blissful honeymoon, suggesting the couple are set for good life. But, that did not happen as Ikepo, the new bride, was suddenly found walking the street almost naked.

    The above scenario is captured in Unbreakable, a forthcoming film that explores the power of love through unbelievable perspective of the protagonist life that threatens a marriage even before it takes root. At the end, a love which started like a great tree with dawn and doom in the branches, survived with care, understanding and faith as theirs was an unbreakable love.

    Nostalgically, the film suggests that the protagonist, Ikepo could be a sister, a wife, a mother or anyone in the society who did not set out to be mentally deranged but who suddenly caught up in the bizarre web of depression and schizophrenia, among other mental ailments.

    Written by Sola Osofian, an award winning poet, the film will address the subject of mental illness, the need for Nigerians to pay close attention and shun the stigmatisation of persons with mental illness. Osofian said he was inspired to screenplay the film out of a discussion on mental health, which has been badly addressed in Nigeria.

    With a cast that includes Richard Mofe Damijo, A’rese, O.C.Ukeje, Bimbo Manuel, John Dumelo, Uche Mac-Auley, Wendy Lawal and Ebele Okaro, it will be produced by Buky Campbell and directed by Ben Chiadika.

    Partnering UnBroken Partnerships, LLC, the initiator of the film is Daar Communications (AIT, Raypowrer), Olaama Cares Foundation, a mental health advocacy and The Retreat, Nigeria’s first purpose built private mental health hospital.

    According to founder of Unbroken Partnership, LLC, Mrs Buky Campbell, the film which will be released in April next year will be set in Lagos.

    Addressing movie writers, Campbell said that while deformity is understood and physical challenge accepted, mental illness is shrouded in mystery and misery.  “With the recent statistics of Nigerians suffering mental disorder to be 40 million, it is time Nigerians stopped seeing mental illness as a taboo topic but pay attention to it. “People seek wellness from certified mental homes instead of chaining them up in back room, handing over to traditional healers and pastors in the hope that a miraculous healing will be imparted by the laying on of anointed hands,” she said.

  • WHO tasks African leaders on mental health care

    The World Health Organisation ( WHO ) has urged African leaders not to relent in the training of Primary Health Care workers on how to detect and manage common mental health problems.

    Dr Matshidiso Moeti, the WHO Regional Director for Africa, made the call in her message to mark the 2018 “World Mental Health Day” celebrated yearly on October 10.

    She also called on parents, caregivers and teachers to build life skills of children and adolescents to help them in coping with everyday challenges as those early years was a time of change for most young people.

    She said that this period could come with stress and anxiety which often led to serious mental illness if not recognised and managed on time.
    According to the regional director, worldwide, 10 to 20 per cent of children and adolescents suffer from mental disorders.

    She said that depression was the third leading cause of mental illness and disability among adolescents globally while suicide was the second leading cause of death among 15 to 29 year old.

    “Adolescence and the early years of adulthood are a time of change; moving, schools, leaving home and starting work.
    For many, these can be times of stress and anxiety and these feelings can lead to serious mental health if they are not recognized and managed well.

    “In the African region, it is estimated that five per cent of the population aged below 15 years suffer from a mental disorder.

    “Half of all mental illness begins by the age of 14 years but most cases go undetected and untreated with serious long term consequences for mental health.

    “Children and adolescents in humanitarian settings are particularly vulnerable to mental distress and illness.

    “The harmful use of alcohol and illicit drugs among adolescents contributes to risky behaviors such as violence, unsafe sex, and dangerous driving.

    “Children and adolescents with mental health disorders often face stigma and limited access to health care and education in violation of their human rights.

    “I therefore, call on governments in the region to develop and strengthen evidence-based programmes for young people with the support of national policy makers and programme managers.

    Moeti said that although countries in the region were making progress in addressing the problems of mental health, much more could be done to build mental resilience from an early age.

    Read Also: Police arrest four suspected armed robbers in calabar

    She said this would help prevent mental distress and illness among adolescents and young adults and manage recovery.

    The regional director maintained that mental health remained fundamental to overall health and for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    Moeti also called on governments, interested partners and civil society to continue collaborating with WHO to improve response to adolescents’ health needs.

    Every year the world observes World Mental Health Day to draw attention to the importance of mental health. The theme for this year is “Young People and Mental Health in a Changing World”.

  • Mercy Aigbe replies hubby on mental illness allegation

    Mercy Aigbe replies hubby on mental illness allegation

    NOLLYWOOD actress, Mercy Aigbe, has replied her husband, Lanre Gentry, over his allegations that she has psychiatric problems and is rude to her parents as mere bunkum.

    Aigbe responded via Instagram on yesterday morning, dismissing Lanre’s claims as lies. “Dear Lanre Gentry,” she began. “It breaks my heart that I have to do this but as it is you who have left me with no choice……I had sleepless nights because I just couldn’t comprehend why someone I loved , someone with whom I have a child will be hell bent on destroying me, I just cannot comprehend it……..

    “I read with tears in my eyes all the LIES you fabricated against me, LIES you feel will justify your inhumane act, LIES you feel will gain you public sympathy and LIES calculated to bring my person to public opprobrium……..

    Gentry & Aigbe… when the going was good

    “You claim …. (1) I am mentally unstable (2) That you have caught me with different men (3) That I do not take care of my parents (4) That a man rented an apartment for me………. LIES all LIES…….. “Dear hubby I challenge you to back on your claims with PROOF!!!!!!!!!………. Hmmmm, Lanre you forget quickly!…., you forget how I have laboured and stood by you all these years, even thought all what I was getting from you was constant beating, harrasment ,threat to my life and threat to destroy my image if I dare, leave you…… .,,You must PROVE all your allegations otherwise God knows I am going to add another lawsuit to the one on ground!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    “Although my team has been pleading with me to stay silent all this while, but I have come to realise that you want to ride on my keeping mum.” Mercy, who already got a restraining order from her husband, began divorce proceedings yesterday. But Lanre was not present at the Lagos court. On Wednesday, Lanre had claimed in a report that Mercy had mental problems. “Mercy has mental issues and I’m the one who knows how many places we’ve been to so she can remain stable,” he said. “I have papers to prove this.”

    Lanre also swore that he had never beaten Mercy and it was Mercy and her friends that ganged up to beat him while still accusing her of infidelity. “See, I understand her antics too well,” he said. “All she wants is to be free to live the life of a single woman.

    What I have tolerated from her all these years, no man can tolerate from any woman. “I worshipped her and I have deposited N8m at Benefit Motors to buy her a N16m Range Rover Evoque for her 40th birthday. I have also paid N1.2m for a hall opposite Sheraton Hotel to celebrate her big, but she has her eyes on other things.”

  • An unreasonable and irrational fear of mental illness: (Part 1)

    There is probably no area of healthcare or medicine that is unreasonably feared like mental health disorders.

    The mere mention of psychiatric illness in the public and even among clinicians seems to drive exceeding panic into the minds of the listeners. Yet, this apprehension is unjustified and unreasonable.

    The data from the World Health Organisation (WHO) and researchers across Nigeria and, indeed, in the world, paint a very but different picture.

    In the barest minimum, one in every five Nigerians suffers from one form of mental health disorder or the other.

    If we translate this figure into real numbers to reflect the population, then we shall begin to see the enormity of psychiatric illnesses in the country.  Assuming that we accept the  population of Nigeria to be 180 million, that means about 36 million Nigerians are mentally unwell. This percentage proportion (not the numbers) is comparable to what is obtainable in the United K and United States.

    To make matters worsisome, mental health is not only stigmatised but very often erroneously attributed to drugs misuse as well as supernatural forces in Nigeria. Sadly, various religious groups, including traditional religious groups, want to “cast out the demon” that is causing mental illness in an individual sufferers.

    The apprehension of the society and individuals against mental health sufferers is understandable but nonetheless irrational. The society’s fear of violent mentally disordered person is palpable.  When I ventured to work in mental health in the UK, on my first day, I was a bit timid until my senior colleagues informed and counselled me that only two per cent or less of mental health patients are actually violent or aggressive. Ninety-eight per cent go about without causing trouble.

    This reflection holds true till this day. Certainly, the few violent conducts of mentally ill patients that got into the media seem to blow the events out of proportions, yet thousands of innocent people in the world are killed by non-mentally ill persons daily via accidents, gun shots, poisoning, wars, and violent-related behaviours. Scientific evidence does not support most cultural and religious positions on mental health. That is not to claim that religion and cultures have no role to play in the healing process: they certainly do as we shall see later.

    Thus, in this series on mental health, we shall be dealing with causes of mental health illness. In the weeks to follow, we shall be looking at the common disorders of anxiety, depression, psychosis as well as mental illness in children, special situations such as pregnancy and care of the elderly.

    Let us take a greater look at the causes of mental illness albeit, specific and definitive causes, which are a continuing subject of investigation.

    Taking a cue from Mind Charity (UK), the following factors could potentially trigger a period of poor mental health.

    Childhood abuse:  Abuse can come in various forms. It may be in the form of sexual exploitation of the innocent child—be it rape or inappropriate entry into the child or misuse of the child.  Trauma to the child or neglect of the child could result in psychological adverse effects to the extent that the individual could develop mental illness either in childhood or later in adulthood.

    Regardless of age, social isolation or loneliness could lead to depression, anxiety or frank psychosis.  Similarly, someone experiencing discrimination and stigma could have his personality compromised due to degradation and undignified devaluation of the person.

    Such individual could suffer from a variety of mental illness.  Bereavement or grief either due to loss of a human being or due to loss of something significant  can result in depression or psychotic depression.

    In the same vein, severe or long-term stress may be at work, home or due to major illness may lead to mental disorder. Being gainfully employed contributes  positively and significantly to our financial, social and mental health. Deprivation and lack of independence coming from unemployment or losing your job could lead to mental health disorder.

    In line with the effect of unemployment, social disadvantage, homelessness, or poor housing poverty and being in debt could cause one to suffer from the diseases of the mind. When a person cares for a seriously ill individual, such carer too could suffer ill effect to his or her mental health.

    A person who is suffering from long-term illness, such as cancer patients, could break down due to stress and develop depression or anxiety. There is also no doubt that misuse of substances such as marijuana, cocaine, heroin and alcohol could result in mental health disorder.

     

    • To be continued next week
  • Myths and Masks of Mental Illness

    With the death of Thomas Adeoye Lambo, Nigeria has lost another distinguished son, a paradigmatic titan and a colossus among the colossi of modern psychiatry. When beggars die, there are no comets seen, to recall the inevitable William Shakespeare. The sullied Nigerian firmament has since blazed forth at the passing of a true prince.

    In his life time, Lambo was a profound source of inspiration for many of his compatriots. In death, he has brought out the hidden literary gifts of his country folks in a rash of brilliant obituaries, particularly a memorable one penned by his protégé , Professor Akinkugbe, another Nigerian medical Maharaja.

    Yet the outpouring of grief at the passing of the great man has also come with a price. The sober reticence has denied us an opportunity to explore the implications of one of Lambo’s most brilliant but casually thrown insights: what to do with the political psychotics eternally thrown up by Nigeria’s dysfunctional political landscape, and the colourful masks they often wear to disguise their mental illness. Why do many depraved people who are obviously in need of psychiatric attention tend to prevail in Nigeria’s power sweepstakes?

    As a mental institution, Aro itself would be a very tame metaphor for the chaotic lunacies of contemporary Nigerian politics and the deranged antics of its principals. But that being the case, what does it say about the collective mental condition of a people who allow themselves to be lorded over by such disturbed characters? After all, the power-maniacs did not descend from Mars. This is perhaps why Lambo ought to have tarried awhile. But this is not Lambo’s turf.  Nigeria awaits its preeminent psychiatrist of political disorder who will combine Lambo’s technical brilliance with the redemptive political passion of a Franz Fanon.

    An illustrious son of illustrious parents, Lambo was not only a genius among men, he was also a human among geniuses. This last point needs to be stressed because genius is often accompanied by petty and anti-social impertinences. But as pointed out by his many admirers, Lambo was a genial and deeply humane fellow.

    Yet here was a man who with one insight of genius changed forever the course and trajectory of African psychiatry. As Professor Akinkugbe has brilliantly noted, this was not the usual feat of robotic remembering, the homestead of the proliferating professorial paper in which a single insight is split into a hundred monographs. Lambo did not need to resort to such academic trickeries. As Meredith Owen has aptly put it, genius does what it must and talent does what it can.

    This was truly the birth of a new science, of rural psychiatry.  According to Lambo, the ravages of mental illness among the rural poor can be mitigated and minimized if the agrarian bliss of their rural community can be reproduced in a psychiatric establishment rather than subject them to the harsh and institutionalized cruelties of the modern psychiatric ward.  Aro became a global trope for humane psychiatry, and the very idea that mental illness may well be a ruling class myth became a theoretical possibility.

    Such moments are very rare in the history of science, a true paradigm shift. With characteristic but vehement elegance, the French call it the moment of epistemological rupture,  that is when the chain of knowledge is broken and with all the violence that accompanies birth and the arrival in the world of a new baby. And since nobody had thought like that before, it meant that technically Lambo was on his own.

    This is what Louis Althusser, the great French Marxist philosopher, meant when he observed that all true geniuses are intellectual orphans. According to him, the price of genius ranges from alienation to madness and even premature death. Althusser should know. After killing his wife and long term collaborator in a moment of insanity, Althusser was promptly committed to a mental institution. He died there.

    A cultured rebel, Lambo was spared the fate of the quintessential genius. Since he threatened no one but his own folks back on a benighted continent, his international patrons could regard him as a benign curio from the heart of darkness. And since he was spared the worst neuroses of genius, it meant he could deliver the most outlandish of insights with deadpan humour and refined restraint.

    Nevertheless, his forage into university administration ended in a comprehensive fiasco. As the Vice Chancellor of the University of Ibadan, Lambo could not understand why students were demanding such privileges as exotic food and beer-drinking when majority of the people were wallowing in rural penury. In any case, who were the upstarts when he himself was the only son of the Iyalode of Egba Christians and a father who was one of the richest merchants of his era?

    It was a gross misreading of the psychology of the new post-colonial elite touching in its idyllic naivete and political innocence. The ensuing political eruption and the killing of a student, Kunle Adepeju, was to cost Lambo his post and some of his reputation. This was precisely the moment that Lambo himself moved permanently into this writer consciousness from hazy psychiatric hero to a humbled national figure.

    As a teenage journalist surveying the massive anti-Lambo demonstration from the verandah of the Nigerian Tribune, Adeoyo, Ibadan, one placard struck me with its malignant brilliance and poetic irony. It read: ARO IS THE BEST PLACE FOR LAMBO. Such was the inventive malice of Nigerian undergraduates of that generation.

    But Lambo was not to return to Aro, either as a patient, or the directing specialist. The former would have been a horrid fate. As Alexander Solshenitzyn, the great Russian writer, has observed in The Cancer Ward, there cannot be a worse fate than for a doctor to suffer an affliction in his own specialization. My next encounter with the phenomenon of Lambo was exactly a decade later in post graduate school at the University of Sheffield.

    The recently deceased and much admired Alec Jenner (1927-2014), a classmate of Lambo from medical school, had by then become the distinguished professor of psychiatry in the famous Sheffield medical school. Decades later, the professor was still so much in awe of Lambo’s feat at medical school that he thought all Nigerians must be geniuses. I benefited from this unduly generous branding, and so did a friend of mine.

    The professor cultivated us, and since Tokunbo Pearce was researching the phenomenon of madness in African literature for a doctoral thesis, we were both encouraged to participate in the professor’s community clinic in his sprawling pile in rural Yorkshire. Orgies of wine-drinking followed intense intellectual dissection of Marx, Sartre, Thomas Szasz, etc.

    One evening after the wine got into my head, I tried to engage a member of the community in an intellectual exchange, a foolishness that saw me retreating with a huge black eye. Professor Pearce, whose father was one of the first indigenous officers of the Nigerian Navy, knew the military virtues of advancing with caution.

    Perhaps Lambo would have cautioned me against intellectual hyperventilation. And we must now return to the great man. When Lambo famously cautioned that Nigeria’s prospective political leadership should be subject to rigorous psychiatric evaluation to determine their mental fitness,  the June 12 fiasco was still far away; so was Abacha; so were the infamous “elections” of 2003 and 2004.

    Every year, the absurdities in the theatre of political chaos lengthen. What will Lambo say?  It is obvious that long before he died, Lambo had given up on the political class of his beloved country. Like a grizzled Yoruba savant, he took the oath of eloquent silence.

    Yet since every Rome has its own barbarians, there was nothing extraordinary about Lambo’s insight. Every society produces its own pathologies as a direct correlation of its economic and political contradictions.  This, in combination with other variables, is what determines the type of political leadership thrown up at a particular epoch. The line between madness and genius is very thin indeed. Churchill was prone to severe and crippling depression, which he called the “black dog”.

    The same affliction dogged old Abe Lincoln. Napoleon was technically a madman. So were Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin.  Lyndon Johnson was a bi-polar personality with cyclothymic mood swings. Richard Nixon was a paranoid psychotic. Ironically his successor, the sober and dour Henry Ford, ascribed his limited success in American politics to the fact that he was “disgustingly sane”.

    The interesting thing about these other societies is that they seem to have developed internal institutional mechanism for easing out political monstrosities before they cause permanent damage, or ,failing that,  for putting damage containment mechanics swiftly in place. For every Hitler, there was a Konrad Adenauer, and for every Stalin, there was a Nikita Khrushchev. When General Washington declined the invitation to become the democratic monarch of America, he was shrewd enough to recognize that there were already more lawyers in the US than soldiers and that he would be putting himself up for demystification.

    The problem with Nigeria and most African countries is that there is no such self-correcting system or institutional mechanism for dealing with a malfunctioning polity. Where there are, they are swiftly rubbished by a rampaging mob of disturbed politicians. After spending thirty years destroying every vibrant institution in the land, the military finally and logically self destructed. Now when it is needed as a patriotic countervailing institution, it is reduced to bleating incoherence and the periodic violence of the politically deranged.

    Rather than shoring up these crippled institutions or rebuilding them from scratch, the current political dispensation has chosen to despoil their remnants, particularly an already badly crippled judiciary. By the time it finishes, the political landscape will even be more awash with colourful and fanciful characters, political transvestites, Rasputins , electoral miracle workers, identity thieves, their doppelgangers and other outlandish figures  as if from outer space.

    But that also bespeaks the end of these times. Whether this is what we are currently witnessing, or we have to tarry awhile for an even more fanciful finale is a matter of conjecture. Surely, a political dispensation that destroys its own natural habitat and demolishes its vital sources of nourishment has written its own suicide note well in advance. It is a crazed serpent that has bitten its own tail. It is only a question of time before the poison heads for its vitals. Where a new Lambo with a dash of Franz Fanon would have been useful is in plotting the political pathologies behind the collective death wish of Nigeria’s postcolonial political elite.

    As a youth, Lambo was known to have worn a mask to his mother’s stall. “Mother, the dead salute you, but where is your son?” the masquerade rumbled. But the mother was not deceived, instantly recognizing her own. Now with the great masquerade departed, the dead and dying of Nigeria, from behind the mask of collective political disorientation, are asking: “Where is our country?” For our own we no longer own.

     

    (Minus some upgrade of historical data, this was first published in 2004 as an obituary tribute to Professor Lambo)

  • Mental illness as time bomb

    Mental illness as time bomb

    SIR: Today, October 10, is World Mental Health Day, a day set aside by the World Health Organisation (WHO), to raise awareness of mental health issues and mobilize efforts in its support. The day is meant to create an avenue for all stakeholders on mental health issues to freely discuss and share experiences about their job. This is quite important in view of a recent research which reveals that about 240 million people across the world experience depression and other symptoms of mental illness during their lifetime. Thus, if not properly addressed, mental illness could as well turn out to be a time bomb waiting to explode in an already troubled world.

    Just as diabetes is a disorder of the pancreas, mental illnesses are medical conditions that often result in a diminished capacity for coping with the ordinary demands of life. Serious mental illnesses include major depression, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), panic disorder, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and borderline personality disorder.  Mental illnesses can affect persons of any age, race, religion, or income. Mental illnesses are not the result of personal weakness, lack of character or poor upbringing.

    The causes of mental illness are complex and vary depending on the particular disorder and individuals. Genetics, early development, drugs, a loss of family member, disease or injury, neurocognitive and psychological mechanisms, and life experiences, society and culture, can all contribute to the development or progression of different mental disorders in people. The most common view, however, is that mental disorder tend to result from genetic vulnerabilities and environmental stressors combining to cause patterns of dysfunction or trigger disorder.

    No matter how seemingly the effects of mental health issues are, whether it is depression, epilepsy, dementia alcohol dependence or death, they can be managed effectively with the affected individual living a reasonably normal life.

    In Lagos, an average of 14.1 percent of the total population suffers from one mental case or the other. It was this realisation that, perhaps, made the state government to adopt a policy that aims to respect the rights of residents with mental disorder. The objective is to guarantee social justice and equity for victims of mental illness as well as ensuring that the rights of people suffering from mental disorders are respected. This new approach by the state government includes sufficient and detailed strategies aimed at reducing the impact of mental health in the state.  The basic components of the state’s mental health policy include promotion aimed at conducting awareness programmes and educating the people on the effects of substance and alcohol abuse, primary care and access to services, treatment guidelines at health care level, services for people with severe mental illness, reduction of workplace stress and the risk of suicides and human resources for mental health.

    We have for long allowed stigma and a now unwarranted sense of hopelessness to erect attitudinal, structural and financial barriers to effective treatment and recovery of victims of mental illness. It is hoped that the occasion of this year’s World Mental Health Day would help, in small way, to break down these barriers.

     

    • Tayo Ogunbiyi

    Ministry of Information & Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja.